Abstract: In the past decade, research in person re-identification (re-id) has exploded due to its broad use in security and surveillance applications. Issues such as inter-camera viewpoint, illumination and pose variations make it an extremely difficult problem. Consequently, many algorithms have been proposed to tackle these issues. To validate the efficacy of re-id algorithms, numerous benchmarking datasets have been constructed. While early datasets contained relatively few identities and images, several large-scale datasets have recently been proposed, motivated by data-driven machine learning. In this paper, we introduce a new large-scale real-world re-id dataset, DukeMTMC4ReID, using 8 disjoint surveillance camera views covering parts of the Duke University campus. The dataset was created from the recently proposed fully annotated multi-target multi-camera tracking dataset DukeMTMC[36]. A benchmark summarizing extensive experiments with many combinations of existing re-id algorithms on this dataset is also provided for an up-to-date performance analysis.
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